The Highwaymen of Bregan Dor
Aranthir VI
Night in the forested hills was a quiet, solitary experience. In the blackened shell of a watchtower sat a solitary wanderer. He was a of both human and elven blood, with short hair of dark brown and green eyes that glittered with the flames of his small campfire. Seated on a fallen stone, he idly stirred his small cauldron and listened to the wind in his pointed elven ears. Somewhere in the darkness an owl hooted and far in distance came a wolf's howl. But Aranthir of Ildranon was not worried. Wolves feared fire, even ones grown as bold as those of Bregan Dor.
A populous and formerly prosperous river valley just fifty miles northwest of the king's city, the region was home to many of the kingdom's wealthiest families, which made it an attractive place for a mercenary such as Aranthir to seek work, at least in normal times.
Aranthir added a pinch of herbs to his little cauldron and impassively regarded the tower around him. its walls were blackened by smoke but spared the king's cannons. Whatever defenders had fled without a fight. Upon arriving as the sun fell, he had searched the tower ruins for food and supplies, but found nothing but rats. Still, the tower was sturdy enough to make a good place to sleep for the night, for it at least shut out the wind that howled through the hills. In the morning he would descend into the valley.
Outside, he heard his horse snort and whinny. Then came the scraping of its hooves in the dirt as it tried to escape the tether. Aranthir set aside his spoon and reached for a dagger sheathed in his boot. With his other hand he drew his longsword as he slowly moved toward the empty doorway of the watchtower. His horse continued to snort and scratch at the dirt until it suddenly stopped. Aranthir slowly and quietly opened the flashpan of his pistol, ready to fire.
There came the sound of someone shuffling in the dirt road. Aranthir cast a spell of protection about himself and peered around the stone doorway.
In the road crouched a robed and cloaked figure, two bony, four-fingered hands clutching a tall, gnarled staff. The figure was short and hunched, its hooded head pointed down. Aranthir stole a look at his horse, who was sleeping silently at its tether.
"Greetings, fellow traveler," Aranthir called. He stepped around the doorway enough to show his body and swordhand but kept his dagger hidden. The figure in the road slowly turned its face toward him. Its face was inscrutable in the darkness, hiding from even Aranthir's keen elven eyes. Two dim yellow eyes with cat's eye pupils stared back at him. Aranthir felt his skin crawl under its gaze.
"Hello to you, Aranthir of Ildranon," the creature rasped. Its voice sounded to Aranthir like the shuffling of ancient scrolls in a long-deserted library. Using its staff like a boatsman's punt, the creature hopped and shuffled a step closer to him. "What good fortune to meet you here."
"Have we met?" Aranthir asked. His eyes searched the woods around them for any other surprises.
"Many times," rasped the creature. "Might I share your fire?"
Aranthir thought it unwise to refuse. "As you wish." He waved to the interior of the hut and stepped back to allow the creature entrance. It approached with a strange sideways shuffle, its staff planted occasionally to allow it some stability.
Aranthir watched the creature with suspicious curiosity. He had never before seen such a creature, and its all-covering cloak made it hard to discern many features of it. The only skin it showed was on its hands and forearms, which were bony and withered, with a pale gray skin like that of a corpse. It hobbled to the doorway and paused. The hooded head lowered and the creature shook its shoulders like a dog coming in out of the rain before it stepped across the threshold.
Inside, it seated itself across the fire from Aranthir and laid the staff across its lap. Though the creature now stood barely more than an arm's length away, the face beneath its hood was completely shrouded in darkness.
"A warm fire on a cold night," it rasped. Aranthir said nothing, observing suspiciously with his weapons in hand. The lowered its face toward the fire, its shrouded face drinking the light and remaining frustratingly hidden by shadows.
"What brings you to my fire?" Aranthir asked after a pause. The creature did not immediately answer and instead stared into the campfire.
"I seek a gift," it replied after a long pause. "A gift of a ring."
Presently, a third eye flicked open in the creature's hood, roving independently from the other two as if it belonged to another creature entirely. Aranthir's grip tightened on his dagger.
"I see you wear a fine ring there," the creature rasped. It pointed to Aranthir's gloved hand, underneath which he did in fact wear a masterfully wrought silver ring set with a brilliantly cut sapphire. But the ring was fully hidden beneath the glove.
"You have the second sight," said Aranthir cautiously. Such sorcerers were never to be taken lightly, especially when encountered in circumstances as strange as these. The creature shrugged in response.
"In the valley below us, there is a man with a ring. He wears it always, but I have need of it."
"You want me to steal his ring from him? Why? For what purpose?"
"Steal it from him? No. I merely require it. It is a gold ring, set with three rubies in the mouths of dragons. Bring it to me at the ruined vineyard along the east road before the sign of the Hunter fades."
"You have not answered my questions. I am not a thief for hire. Who are you?"
"I do not ask you to steal anything. Merely to keep your eyes," its three eyes flickered as one, then locked onto him all together, "open." Aranthir still could not see a face, but he had the distinct sensation that it was smiling it him.
"You must at least tell me your name if I am to work with you?"
The creature was still and silent, the only sounds the crackling of the fire and the wind whistling through cracks in the tower's stone. Then it sighed. "I suppose you may call me Verinusa. If you must have a name."
Verinusa
, Aranthir thought. An old elven word for merchant
. But more than that,
he knew. The word was an archaic one. He would have to look it up in a library sometime.
If only so many had not just been burnt.
"Very well, Verinusa," replied Aranthir at length. "There are eight days left in the sign of the Hunter. What if I cannot bring you this ring before then."